Skip to content

FREE Shipping on orders over $45

Homemade Cajun Seasoning Recipe Homemade Cajun Seasoning Recipe

Homemade Cajun Seasoning Recipe

Salt-free base + three flavor variations

Authentic Louisiana flavor without the sodium bomb. This salt-free Cajun seasoning lets you control the heat and the salt separately—the way professional chefs do it. Make the base recipe, then customize with our three variations: Extra Hot for heat seekers, Smoky for depth lovers, and Mild for the whole family.

Prep Time 5 min
Makes 1/4 cup
Sodium 0 mg
Stores 6 months

⚜️ Classic Cajun Seasoning (Salt-Free Base) Medium Heat

The foundation—authentic Louisiana flavor, zero sodium

Ingredients:

  • 2 tablespoons paprika (Hungarian or Spanish)
  • 1 tablespoon garlic powder
  • 1 tablespoon onion powder
  • 1 tablespoon dried oregano
  • 1 tablespoon dried thyme
  • 1 teaspoon black pepper
  • 1 teaspoon white pepper
  • 1 teaspoon cayenne pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoon smoked paprika (optional)

Instructions:

  1. Add all spices to a small jar or bowl.
  2. Whisk or shake until thoroughly combined.
  3. Store in an airtight container up to 6 months.

To Use: 1-2 tablespoons per pound of protein or per batch of rice/vegetables. Add salt separately (start with 1/4-1/2 teaspoon per tablespoon of seasoning).

🔥 Extra Hot Cajun Seasoning High Heat

For serious heat seekers—Louisiana fire

Modify the Base Recipe:

  • Increase cayenne to 2 teaspoons
  • Add 1 teaspoon Casa Flake Blazing Roots
  • Add 1/4 teaspoon extra black pepper

Best For: Blackened proteins, Cajun fries, anyone who adds hot sauce to everything anyway

⚠️ This is genuinely hot. Start with half the cayenne if you're unsure.

🌫️ Smoky Cajun Seasoning Medium Heat

Deep, complex, with chipotle undertones

Modify the Base Recipe:

  • Increase smoked paprika to 1 tablespoon (reduce regular paprika to 1 tablespoon)
  • Add 1 teaspoon Casa Flake Wild Ember
  • Add 1/4 teaspoon ground cumin

Best For: Grilled meats, smoker recipes, BBQ-Cajun fusion, roasted vegetables

🌿 Mild Cajun Seasoning Mild Heat

All the flavor, family-friendly heat level

Modify the Base Recipe:

  • Reduce cayenne to 1/4 teaspoon
  • Reduce black pepper to 1/2 teaspoon
  • Reduce white pepper to 1/2 teaspoon
  • Add 1/2 teaspoon dried basil for sweetness

Best For: Kids, heat-sensitive eaters, dishes where you want Cajun flavor without the burn

⭐ The Blooming Technique (Makes All the Difference)

Cajun seasoning performs best when bloomed in hot fat before adding other ingredients:

  1. Heat oil or butter in your pan over medium heat.
  2. Add Cajun seasoning directly to the hot fat.
  3. Stir and sizzle for 30-60 seconds until fragrant and slightly darkened.
  4. Add aromatics (onion, celery, pepper) and continue cooking.
  5. Then add liquids and other ingredients.

Why It Works: Spice compounds are fat-soluble. Blooming releases them into the oil, where they can distribute throughout your dish. Skipping this step leaves flavor locked in the dry spices.

Quick Reference: How Much to Use

Dish Amount Salt to Add
Per pound of protein 1-2 tablespoons 1/4-1/2 teaspoon
Jambalaya (full batch) 2 tablespoons 1/2-1 teaspoon
Gumbo (full pot) 1-2 tablespoons To taste (stock adds salt)
Roasted vegetables (1 lb) 1 tablespoon 1/4 teaspoon
French fries (1 lb) 2 teaspoons 1/4 teaspoon
Popcorn (8 cups) 1 tablespoon 1/4 teaspoon
Blackening (per fillet) 1-2 teaspoons Pinch

15 Ways to Use Cajun Seasoning

Classic Louisiana

  • Jambalaya — Bloom with the trinity (onion, celery, bell pepper)
  • Gumbo — Add to the roux or with stock
  • Red beans and rice — Simmer with the beans
  • Dirty rice — Essential flavoring
  • Crawfish/shrimp boil — Add to boiling liquid

Blackened Proteins

  • Blackened chicken — Heavy coat, cast iron, butter, high heat
  • Blackened fish — Catfish, redfish, salmon
  • Blackened shrimp — 2 minutes per side in hot pan

Everyday Uses

  • Cajun fries — Toss hot fries with seasoning
  • Roasted potatoes — Toss with oil before roasting
  • Roasted vegetables — Especially okra, corn, peppers
  • Grilled corn — Butter + seasoning
  • Cajun pasta — Add to cream sauce
  • Eggs — Scrambled with andouille
  • Popcorn — Movie night Cajun style

Storage Notes

Container: Airtight glass jar or spice container

Location: Cool, dark cabinet away from stove heat

Shelf Life: 4-6 months for peak potency

Signs It's Faded: Dull color, weak aroma, flat taste even after blooming

Scaling the Recipe

Half Batch: Halve all measurements (makes ~2 tablespoons)

Double Batch: Double all measurements (makes ~1/2 cup)

Big Batch: Quadruple recipe (makes ~1 cup) — fill a jar for the month

Pro Tip: Make multiple variations at once. Spend 15 minutes measuring out Classic, Smoky, and Extra Hot versions. Label your jars and you're set for any Cajun craving.

Troubleshooting

Tastes flat: Spices are old, or you skipped blooming. Fresh spices + hot oil = full flavor.

Too spicy: Use less cayenne next batch. Balance finished dishes with lemon, cream, or rice.

Not spicy enough: Increase cayenne, or add Blazing Roots for more intensity.

Doesn't taste like restaurant: Restaurants use more fat and more seasoning than home cooks. Be bold. Also ensure your pan is properly hot for blackening.

Color is dull: Paprika is old. Fresh paprika = vibrant red. Replace it.

Why Salt-Free?

Store-Bought Cajun This Recipe
800-1,200 mg sodium per tbsp 0 mg sodium (you add separately)
Salt is first ingredient Paprika is first ingredient
Fixed salt level Adjust salt per dish
Salt masks spice flavors Taste actual spices

← Want More Details?

This recipe is part of our comprehensive guide: How to Make Cajun Seasoning (Salt-Free, All Flavor)

Learn Cajun vs. Creole differences, ingredient breakdown, customization tips, and why salt-free matters.

Leave a comment

Please note, comments must be approved before they are published

Back to top